List of speakers of the Virginia House of Burgesses

The speaker of the Virginia House of Burgesses was the presiding officer of the House of Burgesses, the lower house of the Virginia General Assembly during the period in which Virginia was a colony of the Kingdom of England and, after 1707, the Kingdom of Great Britain.

The General Assembly itself was first organized in 1619, when the colony was owned and administered by the London Company. Twenty-two burgesses were elected to that Assembly, two each from eleven designated settlement areas in the colony. The Assembly formed a unicameral legislature made up of the burgesses and the appointed members of the Governor's Council, presided over by the Governor, George Yeardley. Yeardley designated his secretary, John Pory, a council member, as Speaker of the General Assembly. Pory, however, appears to have acted only as secretary of the Assembly.[1]

The General (or Grand) Assembly met seventeen more times from that first session through 1642. Its legal standing was put in doubt when the London Company was dissolved in May 1624 and Virginia came under the direct administration of the Crown.[1][2]

A crisis developed in the spring of 1635 when an unpopular governor, Sir John Harvey, was arrested and deported to England by his own Council. This led to the February 1639 reappointment of former Governor Sir Francis Wyatt. Wyatt's instructions acknowledged the legal status of the General Assembly and of land titles granted by the London Company, ending 15 years of legal limbo.[2]

In late 1642 Sir William Berkeley was appointed Governor. He reorganized the Assembly into two houses along the lines of the English Parliament. The new lower house, the House of Burgesses, was to provide a counterweight to the Council-led group that had deposed Harvey. However, they maneuvered to elect one of their own, Thomas Stegg, as the first Speaker of the new House when it convened in March 1643.[2]

Speaker Peyton Randolph supported independence in the 1770s. The House of Burgesses was called back by the Royal Governor Lord Dunmore one last time in June 1775 to address British Prime Minister Lord North's Conciliatory Resolution. Randolph, who was a delegate to the Continental Congress, returned to Williamsburg to take his place as Speaker. The House of Burgesses rejected the proposal, which was also later rejected by the Continental Congress.[3] The burgesses met in conventions that served as a revolutionary provisional government for Virginia. Randolph served as the president of the conventions until his death in October 1775. The burgesses did not elect a new speaker, but did elect a new president for the conventions. They passed the role of the House of Burgesses to the House of Delegates when they adopted the Constitution of Virginia in June 1776.

Speakers of the House of Burgesses
Those with non-consecutive terms are italicized
No.[4] Speaker Term County or city
Under the Kingdom of England
1 Thomas Stegg

(d. 1652)

1643 Charles City County
2 Edward Hill Sr.

(d. ca. 1663)

1644–1645
3 Edmund Scarborough

(ca. 1617–1671)

1645 Northampton County
4 Ambrose Harmer

(d. ca. 1647)

1646 James City County
5 Thomas Harwood

(d. 1652)

1647–1649 Warwick County
6 Edward Major

(1615–ca. 1655)

1652 Nansemond County
7 Thomas Dew

(d. ca. 1691)

1652
8 Walter Chiles

(d. 1653)

1653 James City County
9 William Whitby

(d. 1655)

1653 Warwick County
2 Edward Hill Sr. 1654–1655 Charles City County
10 Francis Moryson

(bef. 1628–1680/81)

1656 James City County
11 John Smith

also known as Francis Dade
(1620–1663)

1658 Warwick County
2 Edward Hill Sr. 1659 Charles City County
12 Theodorick Bland

(1629–1671/72)

1660
13 Henry Soane

(d. 1661)

1661 James City County
14 Robert Wynne

(1622–1675)

1662–1674 Charles City County
15 Augustine Warner Jr.

(1642/43–1681)

1676 Gloucester County
16 Thomas Godwin

(d. 1677/78)

1676 Nansemond County
15 Augustine Warner Jr. 1677 Gloucester County
17 William Travers

(d. 1679)

1677 Rappahannock County
18 Mathew Kemp

(d. 1682)

1679 Gloucester County
19 Thomas Ballard

(1630–1690)

1680–1682 James City County
20 Edward Hill, Jr.

(1637–1700)

1684 Charles City County
21 William Kendall

(1621–1686)

1685 Northampton County
22 Arthur Allen

(d. 1710)

1686–1688 Surry County
23 Thomas Milner

(d. 1694)

1691–1693 Nansemond County
24 Philip Ludwell Jr.

(1672–1726/27)

1695–1696 James City County
25 Robert Carter

(1662/63–1732)

1696–1697 Lancaster County
26 William Randolph

(1650–1771)

1698 Henrico County
25 Robert Carter 1699 Lancaster County
27 Peter Beverley

(ca. 1668–1728)

1700–1705 Gloucester County
28 Benjamin Harrison III

(1673–1710)

1705–1706 Charles City County
Under the Kingdom of Great Britain
27 Peter Beverley 1710–1714 Gloucester County
29 Daniel McCarty

(1679–1724)

1715–1716 Westmoreland County
30 John Holloway

(ca. 1666–1734)

1720–1734 1720–22:
York County
1723–26:
Williamsburg
1728–34:
York County
31 Sir John Randolph

(ca. 1693–1737)

1734–1736 Williamsburg
32 John Robinson Jr.

(1705–1766)

1738–1765 King and Queen County
33 Peyton Randolph

(1721–1775)

1766–1775 Williamsburg

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b Kukla, pp. 7–10.
  2. ^ a b c Kukla, pp. 10–12.
  3. ^ "Virginia Resolutions on Lord North's Conciliatory Proposal, 10 June 1775". Founders Online, National Archives. Retrieved April 10, 2016.
  4. ^ The Virginia House of Delegates numbers its speakers uniquely, rather than assigning an ordinal to each discrete term, as with U.S. President Grover Cleveland. The House of Delegates convention is followed here.

References

Kukla, Jon (1981). Speakers and Clerks of the Virginia House of Burgesses, 1643–1776. Richmond, Virginia: Virginia State Library. ISBN 0-88490-075-4.